Theatre/Archaeology. By Mike Pearson and Michael Shanks. London and New York: Routledge, 2001; pp. 215. $27.95 paper.
Identifieur interne : 000728 ( Main/Exploration ); précédent : 000727; suivant : 000729Theatre/Archaeology. By Mike Pearson and Michael Shanks. London and New York: Routledge, 2001; pp. 215. $27.95 paper.
Auteurs : Gay Mcauley [Australie]Source :
- Theatre Survey [ 0040-5574 ] ; 2003-11.
Abstract
Mike Pearson studied archaeology and then spent twenty-five years in physical theatre and site-based performance, notably as founder-director of Brith Gof, while Michael Shanks is an archaeologist, specializing in the classical period and attempting to rethink the bases of his discipline. Together they have written a wonderfully evocative book, tracing the evolving dialogue between them as they explored what each discipline had to offer the other, leading eventually to the elaboration of the common project they call “theatre/archaeology.” They describe “theatre/archaeology” as “an interdisciplinary and hybrid focus on the textures of social and cultural experience; the means and materials of forging cultural ecologies or milieux that attend to that contemporary tension between the global and the local; how we model the event of this cultural production, the weaving of connections through such indeterminate times and places” (xvii). The book is a fascinating intermingling of different narratives (artistic, intellectual, autobiographical) and discourses (scholarly, polemical, visionary), and it begins at the end, which is of course a new beginning, with the outline of the academic programs that have emerged from their interdisciplinary collaboration: Mike Pearson’s course in performance studies in the Department of Theatre, Film and Television Studies at the University of Wales, Aberystwyth, and Michael Shanks’s interdepartmental Archaeology Center at Stanford University in California.
Url:
DOI: 10.1017/S0040557403230143
Affiliations:
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<front><div type="abstract">Mike Pearson studied archaeology and then spent twenty-five years in physical theatre and site-based performance, notably as founder-director of Brith Gof, while Michael Shanks is an archaeologist, specializing in the classical period and attempting to rethink the bases of his discipline. Together they have written a wonderfully evocative book, tracing the evolving dialogue between them as they explored what each discipline had to offer the other, leading eventually to the elaboration of the common project they call “theatre/archaeology.” They describe “theatre/archaeology” as “an interdisciplinary and hybrid focus on the textures of social and cultural experience; the means and materials of forging cultural ecologies or milieux that attend to that contemporary tension between the global and the local; how we model the event of this cultural production, the weaving of connections through such indeterminate times and places” (xvii). The book is a fascinating intermingling of different narratives (artistic, intellectual, autobiographical) and discourses (scholarly, polemical, visionary), and it begins at the end, which is of course a new beginning, with the outline of the academic programs that have emerged from their interdisciplinary collaboration: Mike Pearson’s course in performance studies in the Department of Theatre, Film and Television Studies at the University of Wales, Aberystwyth, and Michael Shanks’s interdepartmental Archaeology Center at Stanford University in California.</div>
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